Monthly Archives: May 2012

In the end, there’s…. chocolate

 

My goals as a daughter and caregiver have changed since 2006, when I moved my Dad to California. I imagined we’d make the grand tour of the foothill wineries, in search of the very best Zin. But then he lost his taste for wine (although he still enjoys a small glass before dinner), and car trips became uncomfortable. I find that I am no longer trying to ensure “a fun old age” for him.

My goals now are simple: keep him from feeling lonely, and make sure he gets chocolate every day. I think I’m succeeding at both.

As I returned him to his assisted living apartment the other day (which he views as purgatory), I told him I’d be back the next day and explained that I don’t want him to be lonely. “I don’t get lonesome,” he said. “But I do miss you.”

And as for chocolate, well, here’s the proof. This is a typical scene of Dad at lunch. What could be better than chicken, milk, the New York Times and a side of chocolate cake?

He’s lost so much of his former life (and glory, he would add). The 5th USMC Reserve Officers Commission class (of May 1941) is down to 25 members from its original complement of 304. His closest friends and brothers are long gone.

But he’s still got me, as well as other family members who love him. And chocolate. Lots of chocolate.

 

 

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Finding myself on the front page, kind of

I was shocked last Sunday when I saw the Sacramento Bee’s front page: “Many types of loss mark midlife for boomers.” The online version has an even more depressing headline, “Boomers’ lives full of losses expected and unexpected.”

I felt like I’d seen a reflection of myself in a carnival fun house mirror. Me, but distorted.

The article by Anita Creamer, consistently one of the Bee’s best columnists and writers (in my humble opinion), reports that boomers are being hit by divorce, the death of parents, fading youth, failing health and economic loss.

Parts of the image I recognize. They call people my age “the sandwich generation” for a reason. We’re often squished between the needs of our children and those of our elders. In 2005, I answered an internal call to care for my Dad and gave up a job and identity that I truly loved.

For the first six months after I “retired,” before my Dad actually made the move from Washington, I felt a profound loss of identity. I didn’t know how to measure the value of my day: what had I produced? I didn’t know how to answer when people asked me, “What do you do?” The hole that I left in my team of co-workers slowly filled in. The hole they left in me was slower to heal.

But loss isn’t what I feel now, with this big caveat: nothing truly bad has happened. We’ve been hit by the economy (who hasn’t?) and we don’t have the resources that we did when I worked, but we’re secure enough.

My marriage is probably stronger and my relationship with my children better, despite the energy that funnels into caring for Dad.

And my health is better. One of the priorities I made for myself starting four years ago was a regular exercise program, something I’d never been good about but knew I needed as an outlet from the stress of caring for Dad. I started by having a trainer come to the house once a week, knowing that I would wimp out when it came to something like – oh, I don’t know – getting my heart rate up above 90. If our appointment was at my house, I figured, I couldn’t escape.

Several women in my neighborhood noticed (since I looked pretty dorky doing lunges in my driveway). They were interested in trying it, too. Four years later, we continue to split the cost of a trainer and added more workouts.

I no longer look at productivity the way I once did. I am better at being in the moment with my father. A friend recently sent me this email:

I have found in my Hospice work that heart time is different from mind time.  Culturally you and I are programmed to be productive — even in our sleep we should be productive with our psyche!!  Foolishness. Just being with each other, and not doing is a major blessing few really get.  The ancient ways here understood it fully.

My elderly friend, Jackie, who lives nearby can sit quietly in her meditation room for a long period.  She can see in a simple flower bloom a beauty that most miss, or the little birds in her back yard.  She absolutely relishes ‘living’ instead of doing although she is a doer too.

Glad you are having this time.  Just remember, sometimes with those who are really advanced in age, they are here but en route to the other side, they spend some moments in the nether region — the space between — maybe a way of getting used to letting go.  When they are in it, they are distant from those around them even when those around them are physically present.  Don’t take it personally — tis the way of the universe — turn it over to God.

I’m grateful to Ms. Creamer for covering this important topic. I’m grateful for this time with my Dad. I’m grateful for the changes this period has wrought in me. I guess I’m just plain grateful.

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The crisis within, for caregivers

Most often, I write about understanding the experience of aging from my Dad’s perspective. That’s what caregivers do: think mostly about the “them” and not so much about the “me.” I wrote the following email to a friend whose husband had a mini-stroke, based on my remembrance of how I felt when my Dad had a health crisis in January:

There are really TWO crises when you’re the caregiver and something bad happens to the one you love. Their crisis is some onset of scary symptoms. But the caregiver has one, too. Your heart beats faster, your eyes probably dilate and there you are rapidly assessing what the hell is going on:
 
“Is this something that is going to escalate right here and now? Should I call 9-1-1? Or if it subsides will it wait until a doctor’s appointment tomorrow? How will it affect my loved one to be dragged somewhere in an ambulance and wait hours in the hospital for testing and evaluation, in an uncomfortable ER bed? If I don’t do anything, will it be my fault if it turns out this was a stroke and I could have prevented permanent symptoms by making sure he/she got that shot? Was has he/she told me he/she wants, and doesn’t want, and how does it relate to this situation? Oh, shit, who’s going to take care of me? Can I handle this?”
 
Then you get in the holding pattern, where you are afraid to leave the bedside for a minute lest you miss the ER doc or a chance of some snippet of information.
 
And then there’s coming home when you are so, so, so exhausted and your family member still needs you – in fact needs you more than ever. “Tired” just doesn’t cover it.
 
Sometimes it’s scary being a caregiver, no matter how grown up and skilled we are. We have to give ourselves time to recover after a crisis, too… 

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